You may recall a couple of years ago there was the first Cancer Gets LOST charity auction, well as it is the 10th anniversary of the start of the show the organisers, Jared Wong and Jo Garfein decided they had to go back and do it all again.

If you didn't know about the previous CGL auction you may wonder why a Fringe site is talking about it, well apart from it being a really cool thing to do, it also has some great Fringe items included in the auction lots.

You may want some screen used amber from Walter's lab, how about an observer hat given out at Comic Con donated by Bad Robot, or a Season 5 DVD set signed by John Noble himself.

There are quite a few Fringe items up for auction along with a lot of cool items from other TV shows and films.

Including LOST (of course), The Walking Dead, Breaking Bad, Once Upon A Time, Alcatraz, The Following, Arrow, Orange Is The New Black, Game Of Thrones, and many more.

100% of the proceeds (hammer price) from Cancer Gets LOST items will be donated to the American Cancer Society. There are also items that the auction partner, Blacksparrow Auctions, have added where a percentage of the hammer price will be donated. All items are clearly marked about which are CGL and which are BlackSparrow.

The new FOX Sc-fi drama Almost Human begins its two-night series premiere this Sunday and Monday (11/17 & 11/18) at 8:00 pm (7:00 pm central).

The show, brought to you by the creators of Fringe - J.J. Abrams, J.H. Wyman, Brad Anderson, et. al - is a mix of Fringe, Robocop, and Blade Runner. You can read the official description after the break.

I've seen the Pilot episode, and really liked it. It will feel very familiar to Fringe fans, almost what we would have gotten if Fringe had stayed in the future.

"The actors answer a full hour of fan questions about their time on the
show, the fate of Gene the cow, what it was like behind the scenes,
their future plans, and much more. At the end of the panel they are
asked to choose between Star Wars and Star Trek, and Seth’s answer is
hilarious!"

TV Guide has an interview with Fringe executive producer J.H. Wyman, which was done before the Almost Human panel at Comic-Con. Wyman discusses Walter's ultimate fate on Fringe and the White Tulip that Peter receives in the series finale:

In the series finale, Walter (John Noble) sacrificed himself by traveling to the future with September's son so that the Observers would never invade the past. In the closing moments, we saw the series flash-back to the day in the park when The Observers originally invaded, but this time, they don't show up. Peter (Joshua Jackson), Olivia (Anna Torv) and young Etta are able to go home as a family.

Though a touching swan song, Fringe fans still lamented the fact that Walter didn't get to be part of the happy family. "I'll make you not sad," Wyman tells TVGuide.com. "Walter is only happy when his brain is being challenged. Walter went to the future, and how do you know he didn't find a way back once again?"

Wyman notes that he meant for Peter's expression when he received the "white tulip" letter from Walter to be ambiguous. Did he recognize it or not? "Maybe someday there will be a Fringe movie and I'll explain some of the things that I want to explain, but I also wanted to let people make their own opinion. I wanted it to be as special to each person individually and let them make their own assumptions and live with it. I have a lot of story I can tell still and I love those characters so much."

IGN has a interview with Fringe executive producer Joel Wyman about his new show "Almost Human". Wyman promises that Fringe actors will appear on the new J.J. Abrams show:

I can guarantee you that we’re going to see Fringe actors. I miss all of them so much, and we’ve been keeping in touch. Anything I can do -- it’s just got to be worthy of them, because they’re all in my heart. I want to write them great stuff and make sure they come out with a big bang.

FRINGE — the supernatural sci-fi crime drama from J.J. Abrams — is back for its fifth and final spellbinding season. The year is 2036. The Observers have become ruthless rulers, limiting free will and speech, and are slowly poisoning Earth’s atmosphere so that only their own kind can survive. All is not lost, however. A series of videotapes, preserved in amber, hold detailed plans for overthrowing the Observers and restoring the planet and its people. The Fringe team will undertake the most important mission of all time: retrieve the tapes, follow their clues, decipher the code, and prepare for the battle to save humanity. Join Fringe scientist Walter Bishop, FBI agent Olivia Dunham, Peter Bishop, and Olivia and Peter’s now-grown daughter, Henrietta, for 13 episodes filled with struggles, surprises and sacrifices in this explosive and emotional final season.

Composer Chris Tilton hangs on to the FRINGE musical reins for the series’ epic finale and delivers some of his finest and most dramatic scoring yet.

Twenty months have passed since David Wu's Fringemunks last released a song recap of a Fringe Season
3 episode. Twenty. The wait is over, and a new song (a parody of
Mumford & Sons' "The Cave") is available for you to hear.

That's
not to say that these twenty months were unproductive. The
Fringemunks, after all, did release seventeen Season 4 songs, three
Season 5 songs, a contest entry song, and a Christmas album all in that
time span.

So why the delay with Season 3 songs, of which only three remain?

"It
might be part psychological, part difficulty, part indifference" says
Wu, who now only needs to complete song recaps for episodes
"Reciprocity," "LSD," and the season finale "The Day We Died" to finish
the Season 3 album.

Of the 100 total Fringe episodes,
this new release - "Epis. 3.20: 6:02 AM EST" - is the 82nd song recap.
Although it recaps a 2011 episode, Wu uses the musical and lyrical
sensibility that he has been employing in more recent material. "It has
to reflect how I feel about the episode now, because we are in the
'now', and we're no longer in the past," says Wu. "And it works for
this song. It is from Walter's point of view, and he has changed. He
is crying. Instruments in his head are different and more profound and
direct."

With lyrics such as Last year, I received a sign from Thee / a white tulip You sent to me / I believed you had forgiven me,
the Fringemunks are at their most spiritual - complete with fanfare
horns, subtle organs, and banjo-like steel guitar meshing together in
the song's instrumental backdrop. And yet amidst the spiritual content,
there is the comedy. I bumped into Olivia, who screwed Peter the previous night,
goes one of the earlier lyric lines. It is a nod to the other Season 3
songs, while also showing that the project isn't afraid to go where
most lyricists don't care to venture. "Whatever the case, there's no
way I would have written these same lyrics two years ago," says Wu.

The Fringemunks started off with a buzz in Fall 2008, just a few weeks into Fringe's five-season run, but now each new song is lucky to get a few "likes" and "shares" on Facebook, or even retweets on Twitter.

"These are lean times for Fringe fan
projects, now that the show is over," Wu admits. "But with this new
song release, and the 18 remaining, there is light at the end of the
tunnel, and still a lot of great music to make and lyrics to write for
this project. And being that fan projects are now a bit thin, this
means that the Fringemunks likely obtain more of a percentage of the
audience, albeit a smaller cumulative amount."

The
project almost came to an end after Season 3 broadcasts ended. "At the
time," says Wu, "the series' end was not defined, so I knew that
committing further to The Fringemunks would mean that it would put a
damper on the rest of my side music career as long as there were
unreleased songs. It reached a boiling point, when I said 'forget it.'"

In
early Fall 2011, Wu in fact announced the project's retirement, to the
dismay of many. But this retirement was short-lived, as Wu devised a
plan for the Season 4 songs. "Basically I was going to parody the
entire White Album (the nickname for the Beatles' eponymous 1968
album), in order. The season premiere would be - and was - a parody of
'Back in the U.S.S.R.,' while the finale would have parodied 'Revolution
9' and 'Goodnight.' It was a crazy idea, abandoned after four songs -
but it saved the project. And the 4 songs are among the best, even if
the subject matter wasn't the greatest."

Yet all the
while, the Season 3 episodes remained on the shelf. "I always knew I
wanted to finish them," says Wu, "but I just wasn't in the mood at the
time." But now, with only three songs remaining from that middle
season, the album's stock is up.

Critically acclaimed Fringe explores new cases with endless impossibilities. Set in Boston, the FBI's Fringe Division started when Special Agent Olivia Dunham enlisted institutionalized "fringe" scientist Walter Bishop and his globe-trotting, jack-of-all-trades son, Peter, to help in investigations that defy all human logic - and the laws of nature. The first in an all-new series of tie-in novels!

The author, Christa Faust, has written tie-ins to Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street and The Twilight Zone amongst others. Her most recent novel Money Shot for Hard Case Crime won the Crimespree Award and was nominated for several others — a sequel is forthcoming. She lives in Los Angeles, California, and loves vintage shoes and noir cinema.